Pontifical College v. Kleeli

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241, 18 Ohio Dec. 703, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 96

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241 (Pontifical College v. Kleeli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pontifical College v. Kleeli, 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241, 18 Ohio Dec. 703, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 96 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

The complaint is that the plaintiffs were not benefited by the township ditch improvement set forth in the petition, and having been charged and assessed with a portion of such improvement and the same having been placed on the tax duplicate against them for collection, they are entitled to a permanent injunction against such assessment. This allegation of the petition having [242]*242been denied, the case stands for decision on the issues thus made.

It appeal’s from the pleadings, and evidence that the ditch improvement is in and over a natural water-course beginning at the Ilare-Eichner ditch, thence running up stream in a northeasterly direction through the land of the defendant, Clark Harris, thence crossing the southeast corner of the land of Lucy Harris, thence in an easterly direction across the land of David Spangler and the* Lot L. Smith road, terminating in the east line thereof. The water-course further extended on from the head of said ditch improvement eastwardly onto the lands of plaintiff, Lot L. Smith, which land is immediately east of Spangler and the Smith road. Just how far across the Lot L. Smith land the water-course originally extended does not appear, although it is safe to say that its head was in some marshy land near the eastern boundary.

About forty-two years ago the plaintiff’s (Smith) mother became possessed of a tract of land, a part of which now belonging, to the plaintiff, Smith, is involved in this case, consisting of about sixty acres, and immediately west thereof, the defendant Clark Harris’ father then owned a tract, a part of which now belonging to Clark Harris and other defendants in severalty is also involved, and over these lands the water-course in question passes.

Shortly after the mother of the plaintiff, Smith, came into possession of the Smith tract, a conversation was had between the elder Harris and Lot L. Smith’s father in regard to improving the water-course through their1, respective land, and soon thereafter for probably one-half the distance, or 500 to 600 feet, across the Smith lands from his west line, and for probably 350 feet across the Harris land from his east line, they each digged practically a straight ditch, following in a general way the old water-course for the distance above mentioned. The old watercourse was probably one foot or more deep and two to five feet wide, and the new ditch constructed was probably two feet or more deep and probably three feet wide at the top with sloping sides. Where Smith and Harris constructed this ditch, the Smith land was in the main flat and low, as well as the Harris tract, and the flow of the surface water on the Smith land was [243]*243in general towards this ditch and old water-course, but there were basins or low wet places on his land where the water would not all flow to the ditch-without aid of artificial drainage, although the feasible means to drain these low places was into the ditch, as the lay of the land at the low places or basins was higher than the ditch so that the water therefrom would flow toward the ditch. In other words, these low places were within the general watershed of this ditch and water-course. After reaching the ditch the flow of the water therein was westward and southwestward, over and across the elder Harris, now Spangler and Harris. The Smith lands were higher than the lands west and southwest through which the water-coui’se ran and the ditch thereafter was constructed by the elder Smith and Harris over the watercourse as above indicated.

Some tiling was done by plaintiff’s (Smith) father shortly after coming into possession of this land from the head of the ditch, as then opened, eastward and northeastward on the Smith lands; but by reason of the tendency of a part of the surface water on the east side of these lands to. flow eastward, a part of the tile became useless, and this was especially so when the elder Smith sought to tap a pond on the east side of the premises.

Since the construction of the ditch between Harris and Smith along the old water-course, as above indicated, the same has been on several occasions cleaned and probably in some respects made deeper and larger by the plaintiff Smith and the defendant Spangler, the present owner of a part of the elder Harris tract; but apparently all that part of the old water-course west and southwest of Spangler had never been materially disturbed up to the time of the ditch improvement in question, and it had become more or less filled up.

Beginning about thirteen or fourteen years ago, and' continuing off and on down to and since the ditch improvement in question, the plaintiff, Smith, has constructed through and across his land three main tile ditches terminating at the head of the open ditch along the water-course constructed by his father, one running northeastwardly, another eastwardly, and the other southeastwardly. He has also constructed many lateral tile ditches running into these main tile ditches and into the main [244]*244open ditch, below its head, whereby the water therefrom all empties into the open ditch on his land, and thence flows down to and through the ditch improvement - in question. These tile ditches have, as a rule, been constructed through low wet places on his land, and in a few instances have tapped the shallow basins or low places above mentioned, .where, but for the tile ditches, the water either was obliged to percolate through the earth, or evaporate, in order to escape, although, unless it were very wet, the water in these basins or low places would disappear in the course of several days. These low places, or at least some of them, were called by witnesses, marshes or swamps, swales or ponds, and were probably covered in wet weather by water six inches to one foot in depth. While it is not shown with exactness just how many acres were in this condition, I think there may have .been from six to ten acres so covered in wet seasons.

Prior to the ditch improvement in question, the water from the Smith land brought to the open ditch through the tile ditches then leading to it, as well as. the surface water finding its way to the tile and the open ditch, was without apparent interruption carried off through the open ditch then on the Smith land, and flowed westward down across Spangler, and thence southward across Lucinda and Clark Harris to the Hare-Eichner ditch. How much, if at all, the volume of water had been increased, or its flow accelerated, by reason of the original construction, or the subsequent cleaning out or enlargement of the open, ditch on the Smith and Spangler lands, or the tiling by Smith on his own land, is not shown; but, so far as appears, the plaintiff, Smith, had not by any acts of his in draining his land into the open ditch increased the volume of water in the water-course below his land beyond the natural capacity thereof. Doubtless some additional water had' been brought into this open ditch on Smith’s land b.y his own industry, and he had increased the flow by. the straightening, deepening, widening and tiling mentioned on his own land, but it is not possible to say from the evidence that the adjacent landowners west and southwest of him and lower down on the water-course had thereby suffered any substantial injury; or that he had there[245]*245by materially increased the flow of water upon them, by overtaxing the capacity of the stream.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Waffle v. . New York Central R.R. Co.
53 N.Y. 11 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Waffle v. New York Central Railroad
58 Barb. 413 (New York Supreme Court, 1870)
Treat v. Bates
27 Mich. 390 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1873)
Rath v. Zembleman
68 N.W. 488 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1896)
Vannest v. Fleming
44 N.W. 906 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241, 18 Ohio Dec. 703, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pontifical-college-v-kleeli-ohctcomplfrankl-1907.